1) Any childhood
memory that was important in guiding you into your occupation?; how did
you become interested in this Field?

When
I was very little, if I was noisy in the morning when my mother was
trying
to sleep, she'd make me come in her bed. I was never sleepy in the morning,
so I decided to start reading the encyclopedias on her bed headboard
bookcase.
I started with A and read all the way through that one. Then I started
the B one, and read all the way through BIRD. That article was so fascinating
that after that, I just read about birds over and over and over, until
I had the whole long article about birds memorized.

I lived in Chicago, and didn't know how to learn about birds other than
that enclyclopedia article, but I loved listening to House Sparrows cheeping
at dusk, and robins and cardinals singing early in the morning. I spent
a lot of time whistling to cardinals and getting them to whistle back.

My fifth grade teacher was very understanding about how I cared about
animals but still wanted to learn all about them. When our class dissected
worms, I had trouble choosing an earthworm to dissect, because I identified
with them. He told me he would find me a worm that was already dead. Unfortunately,
none of my teachers was a bird watcher or helped me learn more about them.
But I'm proud that I figured out how on my own.
3) Your background: (job title, profession, education/training etc...)

I started out as a teacher, with a degree in elementary education
and two years of graduate courses in environmental education, taking
lots
of zoology classes. When I was teaching junior high school in Madison,
Wisconsin, I started writing articles about birds for the newspaper there.
In Duluth, when I was staying at home while my kids were little, I started
doing a little radio program about birds—soon people were bringing
me hurt birds to take care of, and so I learned how to do it right and
got
a license to rehabilitate wildlife. This is how I got interested in nighthawks,
from taking care of them, and soon started wondering about some things
about how their bodies worked, and started studying about that. I began
working on a Ph.D. studying nighthawk digestion. Now I mainly write
books and magazine and newspaper
articles about birds, as well as serving as a bird speaker, educator
and tour leader.

4) Favorite work story or experience: (One of your most exciting,
memorable, or exhilarating experiences in the Field!)

I
am most proud of winning the National Outdoor Book Award for my book
Sharing the Wonder of
Birds with Kids.

Every year I do surveys for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service/National
Biological Survey. I've had a lot of cool experiences—like imitating
a baby raven and getting the parents to fly right down within inches
of me, looking to see where I was hiding the baby. Once I whistled back
to
a Pine Grosbeak and it came closer and closer until it lighted right
on my finger! I've had a Golden-crowned and a Ruby-crowned Kinglet land
on
me, too.

The first nighthawk I ever took care of was ready to be released on an
August evening when lots of nighthawks were migrating. He flew
up in
the
sky and headed west (to clear Lake Superior) straight into the setting
sun. But suddenly he turned around and flew right back to me! He circled
over
my head two or three times, as if he really wanted to say good-bye, and
then he left for good.

5) What advice can you provide to a student who might be interested
in working in your occupation some day?

Learn as much about math and science as you can, and when you have to
write a report about anything, try to have fun with it. Explain the things
about the topic that really interest you, and write it in a way that tries
to get your teacher really interested, too. 6) Any family members, including pets?

I am a mom with 3 kids—two sons and a daughter. We have a big dog
named Betsy and a little dog named Photon (named because she's like
a tiny particle
of light and energy). I also have a parrot named Pickles and a lovebird
named Rosie and a beloved cat.

7) Favorite book(s), Favorite food(s), Any hobbies?

I love reading just about any bird book. My favorites are The Audubon
Society Encyclopedia of North American Birds (it has just about EVERYTHING
a person could want to know about birds), The Nights of the Pufflings, a really neat non-fiction picture story book about some kids in Iceland
who save thousands of baby puffins all on their own every year, and Kingbird
Highway by Kenn Kaufman, about how a teenager spent a year birdwatching
all over North America, seeing 671 species in a single year. I've been
birding for 36 years, and in 2000 reached my goal of seeing 600 species
in North America. Now I'm more focused on taking pictures of the birds
I see. My favorite foods are pizza and ice cream. I like writing haikus
and watching all kinds of movies.

Laura Erickson

Click here to
learn more about Laura, the wonderful books she's written, and much
more information "For the Birds."